Water smells like rotten eggs
#1
Registered User
Thread Starter
Water smells like rotten eggs
When we first moved in our house @ 10 yrs ago, the water had the "rotten egg" smell and it wound up being our well tank bladder had some pin holes in it letting bacteria in. Replaced the bladder and alls been fine until recently. Now the smell is back but its just at one sink???? If memory serves me correct this is the only fixture that still has galvanized plumbing...I changed everything else to PVC. Could that somehow cause it? I hate to spend the $$ on a new bladder when it seems like its concentrated on this one sink.
Oh yeah, I thought about pouring some bleach down the well but am afraid I'd screw something up by either ruining the laundry or tearing up the well but it might be a last resort.
Oh yeah, I thought about pouring some bleach down the well but am afraid I'd screw something up by either ruining the laundry or tearing up the well but it might be a last resort.
#2
Sulfur producing bacteria.....put about 1 cup of Clorox into the system......run it until you can smell the Clorox mixture coming out of all fixtures......let sand for 2 hours.......smell gone......I have to do it to my system about twice a year.
#3
Urban Legend
Also you can treat your whole well add bleach ( most home size wells add about 1/2 -1 gallon ) and run the well until you smell chlorine shut well off and let stand for two hours then water your yard until the bleach is out of the system then flush the house. Give me the details on your well and I can give you exact dosage. I will need size of the casing and the depth of the water.
#5
Urban Legend
#6
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#7
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Thread Starter
What she said Just don't use the "spring fresh " Clorox
Also you can treat your whole well add bleach ( most home size wells add about 1/2 -1 gallon ) and run the well until you smell chlorine shut well off and let stand for two hours then water your yard until the bleach is out of the system then flush the house. Give me the details on your well and I can give you exact dosage. I will need size of the casing and the depth of the water.
Also you can treat your whole well add bleach ( most home size wells add about 1/2 -1 gallon ) and run the well until you smell chlorine shut well off and let stand for two hours then water your yard until the bleach is out of the system then flush the house. Give me the details on your well and I can give you exact dosage. I will need size of the casing and the depth of the water.
Its either a 3, 4 or 6"...don't really know but I do know that its a deep well @ 600' deep. How do you get the clorox down into the well?
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#8
You don't. The water coming from the well is not the problem, the water that has stagnated in the pressure tank is. You may need to make yourself a small "well" in the pipe that goes to the bladder......then you can introduce the Clorox into the system there. If your filters are up steam of the pressure tank, put the Clorox into the system there. I have an air gap which I put a threaded coupling on ,that is up stream of the pressure tank, which I use to introduce the Clorox......you don't need to try and get the Clorox to the source of your water. No problem on the name confusion guys, I get it all the time.
#9
Urban Legend
But just using the SWAG method with the full depth of the well and a 6” casing for a 100 PPM dosage you will only need a ½ gallon.
With this high of a dose, if you have Iron or Manganese in the water you will most likely notice a red or black tint while you are flushing. Make sure you get it all out or you will stain the laundry, but ether one will not hurt to drink just tastes bad.
#11
Registered User
Thread Starter
Gravity............. Just dump it in . Don't need to know the depth of the well just how deep the water is in the well or how far it is to the water ether will do.
But just using the SWAG method with the full depth of the well and a 6” casing for a 100 PPM dosage you will only need a ½ gallon.
With this high of a dose, if you have Iron or Manganese in the water you will most likely notice a red or black tint while you are flushing. Make sure you get it all out or you will stain the laundry, but ether one will not hurt to drink just tastes bad.
But just using the SWAG method with the full depth of the well and a 6” casing for a 100 PPM dosage you will only need a ½ gallon.
With this high of a dose, if you have Iron or Manganese in the water you will most likely notice a red or black tint while you are flushing. Make sure you get it all out or you will stain the laundry, but ether one will not hurt to drink just tastes bad.
I thought he pressure tank sat on top of the well head but in hindsight I think it sets to the side of it. Is there normally a cap you can remove to access the water?
#13
Urban Legend
Then run your garden hose and circulate the water back into the well until you smell bleach .
#14
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Location: Schwenksville, Pa.
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Bigfoot and annabella are correct in what they told you. Is the smell from the hot or cold side? If it is from the hot turn the water heater up. Also isthis sink used a lot or does it go unused for long periods of time? We do have a sheet at work on how to disinfect a well. I work for the state of Pa. regulating drinking water facilities. Keith
#15
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Thread Starter
Bigfoot and annabella are correct in what they told you. Is the smell from the hot or cold side? If it is from the hot turn the water heater up. Also isthis sink used a lot or does it go unused for long periods of time? We do have a sheet at work on how to disinfect a well. I work for the state of Pa. regulating drinking water facilities. Keith